Singa the Lion
Singa The Kindness Lion is a mascot used for various public education campaigns in Singapore. It was created to educate the public on courtesy and kindness. A public education campaign featuring Singa was launched in 1982. From 2009, Singa the Kindness Lion has been adopted as the official mascot of the Singapore Kindness Movement.[1]
Origins
[edit]Singa the Kindness Lion was initially created by a team of artists working under the then Ministry of Information & the Arts (MITA) - Now known as Ministry of Information, Communications and the Arts. The creation of Singa was overseen by Basskaran Nair, a civil servant, who headed the National Courtesy Campaign in its early years.
The team tasked with creating Singa consisted of chief artist Joseph Teo, Ahmad Asran and Eileen Wat. The team created Singa within a period of 6 weeks.[2] The initial design of Singa was of a 'fierce-looking' lion and the subsequent revisions were overtly gentle in design.[3]
The final version of Singa was only conceived after more than a hundred revisions.[3] The final design depicts Singa as a golden lion with a bright and welcoming smile. Singa was introduced during a time where most campaigns were slogan driven. Singa's introduction paved the way for other mascots to be introduced into various public campaigns.
The Singapore Productivity campaign followed suit and adopted 'Teamy' the bee to address issues of productivity in the Singapore workforce.[4]
Singa as popular character
[edit]Since its introduction, Singa has been made into a host of items ranging from badges, stickers, documentaries, jingles, songs, posters and banners, debates, contests, talks, exhibitions, courtesy courses, leaflets, handbooks and pamphlets. Singa soon became a familiar face with regular appearances in community events and advertisement campaigns.
The success of Singa the Kindness Lion was revealed in the Singa City exhibition held in 1987. Some 600,000 visitors visited the month-long exhibition held in Raffles City.[5]
Additionally, Singa the Kindness Lion has been made into a popular board game of the 1980s, 'Courtesy Snakes And Ladders', in which discourteous animals will impede the progress of players through acts of discourtesy while landing on courteous animals.
Since being subsumed by the Singapore Kindness Movement, Singa has been revamped and reintroduced to the Singapore public in 2001. Singa the Kindness Lion has been incorporated in the Singapore Kindness Movement logo. Statues of Singa have been erected next to the Ministry of Information, Communications and the Arts building in Fort Canning Road.[6]
Project Singa
[edit]Project Singa was launched in 2010 as a project to commemorate World Kindness Day. A series of 2.5 inch tall vinyl collectible figurines of Singa the Kindness Lion were created in collaboration with Singapore-based toy maker Play Imaginative and various local artists.[7]
Additionally, a design contest was also held in which winning entries would be made into figurines. A total of 34 designs were designed and developed to promote messages of graciousness and kindness in society.
Intellectual property rights
[edit]The image of Singa the Kindness Lion and the word 'Singa' are the registered trademarks of the Singapore Kindness Movement.[8] The use of the trademarks are subjected to conformance to the Singapore Copyright Act (Chapter 63) and has to be approved by the Singapore Kindness Movement.
References
[edit]- ^ "Singapore Kindness Movement". Retrieved 10 January 2011.
- ^ Evangeline Gamboa (8 May 1982). "How Eileen wiped the snarl off Singa". The Straits Times. p. 9.
- ^ a b "Singa — what it could have been". The Straits Times. 30 June 1988. p. 27.
- ^ "Campaign mascots come to life". The Straits Times. 21 November 1982. p. 16.
- ^ "Holiday fun at Raffles City fair". The Straits Times. 19 May 1987. p. 13. Retrieved 10 January 2011.
- ^ "Please do not feed these lions at Fort Canning Park". Archived from the original on 18 April 2013. Retrieved 10 January 2011.
- ^ "About:Project Singa". Archived from the original on 8 December 2010. Retrieved 10 January 2011.
- ^ "IPOS: Details of Mark". www.ip2.sg. Retrieved 2020-12-23.